No. 2: Artificial Intelligence of Humor
All Papers
Do Jokes Have to Be Funny: Analysis of 50 “Theoretically Jokes”
PDFDecomposition and Distribution of Humorous Effect in Interactive Systems
PDFDetecting and Generating Ironic Comparisons: An Application of Creative Information Retrieval
PDFOrganizing Committee
PDFPreface: Artificial Intelligence of Humor — Computational Humor
PDFOn the Identification of Humor Markers in Computer-Mediated Communication
PDFJapanese Puns Are Not Necessarily Jokes
PDFFormal Humor Logic Beyond Second-Most Plausible Reasoning
PDFHuman Judgment on Humor Expressions in a Community-Based Question-Answering Service
PDFHumor Recognition in Psychiatric Patients and Artificial Intelligence
PDFHansel and Gretel for All Ages: A Template for Recurring Humor Dialog
PDFDetecting Document Types, Plot Twists, and Humor
PDFPragmatically Computationally Difficult Pragmatics to Recognize Humour
PDFPuns in Japanese Computer Mediated Communication: Observations from Misconversion Phenomena
PDFOn a Possible Generative Approach to Structurally Ambiguous Humor
PDFA Spectrum of Linguistic Humor: Humor as Linguistic Design Space Construction Based on Meta-Linguistic Constraints
PDFExperimental Standards in Research on AI and Humor When Considering Psychology
PDFA Little Metatheory: Thought on What aTheory of Computational Humor Should Look Like
PDFTowards a New Structural Model of the Sense of Humor: Preliminary Findings
PDFModeling Social Emotions in Intelligent Agents Based on the Mental State Formalism
PDFComputational Humor: Promises and Pitfalls
PDFConstructions for Joke Recognition
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